JERRY SEYMOUR v. KATHLEEN D. COLEBANK, M.ED., NCPSYA; DR. ROBERT KLINGLESMITH; AND KENTUCKY DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
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RENDERED:
JULY 29, 2005; 2:00 p.m.
TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth Of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO.
2004-CA-001942-MR
JERRY SEYMOUR
APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM OLDHAM CIRCUIT COURT
HONORABLE PAUL W. ROSENBLUM, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 04-CI-00286
v.
KATHLEEN D. COLEBANK, M.ED.,
NCPSYA; DR. ROBERT KLINGLESMITH;
AND KENTUCKY DEPARTMENT OF
CORRECTIONS
APPELLEES
OPINION
AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE:
HENRY, McANULTY, AND MINTON, JUDGES.
HENRY, JUDGE:
Jerry Seymour appeals from a July 28, 2004, order
of the Oldham Circuit Court dismissing his petition for
declaratory judgment.
On review, we affirm.
Seymour is an inmate incarcerated for a sex offense at
the Kentucky State Reformatory (“KSR”) in LaGrange, Kentucky.
Pursuant to Kentucky law, specifically KRS1 197.045(4), Seymour
is only eligible for good time credit or parole once he
completes the Sex Offender Treatment Program (“SOTP”).
1
Kentucky Revised Statutes.
Upon
arriving at KSR, Seymour enrolled in the eight-week Assessment
and Orientation module of the SOTP, which is used to determine
if an inmate is qualified to participate in and successfully
complete the full program.
Following completion of this module,
Seymour’s progress was characterized as follows:
Upon completion of that 8-week module, you
continued to deny major elements of your
current offense, you refused to discuss any
information related to the previous sexual
offense for which you were charged and
convicted, and you continued to blame the
victims of your offenses for your current
difficulties.
It was your responsibility to move toward a
position of ownership. The treatment team
of the SOTP made every attempt to assist
you, and continuously were met with your
argumentative attitude, refusal to take
responsibility, and continued denial of the
harm you caused to the victims of your
sexual crimes.
As a result of this evaluation, Seymour was found to be a “nonadmitter” by the DOC and was denied admission to the full SOTP.
On April 19, 2004, Seymour filed a Petition for
Declaration of Rights and for Temporary and Permanent Injunctive
Relief with the Oldham Circuit Court against the Appellees
asking for a ruling that he was entitled to attend the SOTP.
The Appellees responded to this petition with a motion to
dismiss.
This motion was granted by the circuit court in an
order entered on July 28, 2004.
A subsequent CR 59.05 motion
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filed by Seymour was denied in an August 6, 2004, order.
This
appeal followed.
On appeal, Seymour raises a number of contentions.
The first is that the DOC, because of personal bias and
prejudice, refused to design an individualized treatment program
for him, once he was denied acceptance to the full SOTP, that
would help him overcome the “denial” issues that led to his not
being admitted.
Seymour argues that such a program is required
by KRS 197.420(2)(b), which defines “treatment services” as
including “individualized treatment plans.”
KRS 197.400 to KRS 197.440 require that the DOC
operate a “specialized treatment program for sexual offenders.”
To comply with these provisions, the DOC created the SOTP.
A
sex offender is considered “eligible” for admittance to the SOTP
when the sentencing court, the DOC, or both, determine that the
individual exhibits a “mental, emotional, or behavioral
disorder” absent active psychosis or mental retardation and
“[i]s likely to benefit from the program.” KRS 197.410(2)(a) and
(b).
KRS 197.420(1) grants the DOC “the sole authority and
responsibility for establishing by regulation the design of the
specialized program created in KRS 197.400 to 197.440.”
The makeup of the SOTP is set forth in Kentucky
Corrections Policies and Procedures (“CPP”) 13.6, which is
entitled “Sex Offender Treatment Program,” and which describes
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as its purpose, “[t]o provide a specialized treatment program
for sexual offenders.” CPP 13.6(II).
As noted above, prior to
acceptance into the SOTP, a sex offender must participate in an
eight-week Assessment and Orientation group so that his or her
ability to successfully participate in and complete the SOTP can
be evaluated.
Those offenders deemed unlikely to benefit from
the SOTP are not accepted into the full program.
These
offenders specifically include those persons defined as “nonadmitters” under CPP 13.6(IV)(3), which encompasses people “who
do[] not admit guilt or responsibility for committing the sexual
offense.” CPP 13.6(VI)(B)(2).
All rejected non-admitters,
without exception, are permitted to reapply for admission into
the full SOTP after 180 days, and they may be accepted into the
program “if [they are] willing to admit guilt or responsibility
for [their] sexually assaultive offense.” CPP 13.6(VI)(B)(3).
KRS 197.420(2) requires that the SOTP “shall include
diagnostic and treatment services in both inpatient and
outpatient environments.”
KRS 197.420(2)(b), which defines
“treatment services” and is specifically relied upon by Seymour
in his argument, reads as follows:
“Treatment services” shall include
individualized treatment plans to include
individual, group, marital, and family
counseling; psychoeducational courses to
include sex education and victim
personalization; and social skills
development to include assertiveness
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training, stress management, and aggression
management....
Seymour contends that this definition’s inclusion of
“individualized treatment plans” somehow requires the DOC to
offer him individual treatment beyond the eight-week Assessment
and Orientation module that will assist him in being able to
qualify for admission into the SOTP.
We fail to see the merit
in this contention.
“The interpretation of a statute is a matter of law.”
Commonwealth v. Gaitherwright, 70 S.W.3d 411, 413 (Ky. 2002).
"As with any case involving statutory interpretation, our duty
is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the General
Assembly.
We are not at liberty to add or subtract from the
legislative enactment nor discover meaning not reasonably
ascertainable from the language used."
Beckham v. Board of
Education, 873 S.W.2d 575, 577 (Ky. 1994), citing Gateway
Construction Co. v. Wallbaum, 356 S.W.2d 247 (Ky. 1962).
Nothing within the statutory scheme setting forth the foundation
for the SOTP makes any mention of the requirement espoused by
Seymour, nor is there any language therein suggesting that the
DOC is obligated in any way to assist a sex offender in becoming
eligible for the program.
Indeed, the language of KRS
197.410(2) and (2)(b) clearly indicates that the General
Assembly anticipated that some sex offenders would not become
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eligible for the program, notably where a person is found
unlikely to benefit from it, a determination left to the
discretion of the sentencing court or the DOC.
We believe that
a situation such as the one presented here, where a sex offender
refuses to accept responsibility for his actions, would
certainly allow for a determination that said offender would be
unlikely to benefit from the program.
We also note, as
mentioned above, that the General Assembly gave the DOC “the
sole authority and responsibility for establishing by regulation
the design” of the SOTP. KRS 197.420(1).
Consequently, we
cannot say that a failure to provide an individualized treatment
plan to enable a sex offender to qualify for the SOTP is in
derogation of this considerable leeway afforded the DOC or of
anything else set forth in KRS 197.400 to 197.440.
We have also not been presented with anything of
substance in the record that would reflect any sort of “personal
bias or prejudice” towards Seymour.
His failure to be approved
for admittance within the SOTP appears to have been based solely
upon his failure to take responsibility for his actions, a
determination that is consistent with CPP 13.6 and KRS
197.410(2).
Accordingly, we must conclude that Seymour’s
contentions in this respect are without merit.
For similar reasons we must reject Seymour’s argument
that CPP 13.6(VI)(B)(2)—which reads: “A sex offender who does
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not admit guilt or responsibility for his sexually assaultive
offense shall not be accepted in the Sex Offender Treatment
Program, after the initial assessment phase”—is null, void, and
unenforceable as it violates KRS 13A.120(2)(f) and (i).
Those
provisions provide that an administrative body shall not
promulgate administrative regulations “[w]hen a statute sets
forth a comprehensive scheme of regulation of the particular
matter” or “[w]hich modify or vitiate a statute or its intent.”
For reasons noted above, we do not believe that CPP 13.6
modifies or vitiates KRS 197.400 to 197.440 or their intent;
instead, it is fully consistent with those statutes.
Moreover,
the General Assembly, via KRS 197.420(1), explicitly instructed
the DOC to set forth the design of the SOTP via regulation,
which it did in CPP 13.6.
Consequently, Seymour’s argument in
this respect is also without merit.
Seymour next argues that the Appellees have denied him
his statutorily created liberty interests under the 5th and 14th
Amendments to the United States Constitution and under Sections
2 and 11 of the Kentucky Constitution by wrongfully refusing to
admit him into the SOTP.
Seymour particularly points to the
fact that, without completing the program, he cannot qualify for
parole.
Again, we find that this argument is without merit.
KRS 439.340(11) states that “[n]o eligible sexual
offender within the meaning of KRS 197.400 to 197.440 shall be
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granted parole unless he has successfully completed the Sexual
Offender Treatment Program.”
Seymour argues that by being
prevented from participating in this program, he is being
deprived of his right to parole.
However, our courts have long
held that parole is not a right, but is instead a privilege that
is “a matter of grace or gift to persons deemed eligible.”
Stewart v. Commonwealth, 153 S.W.3d 789, 793 (Ky. 2005), citing
Lynch v. Wingo, 425 S.W.2d 573 (Ky. 1968); see also Pappas v.
Kentucky Parole Board, 156 S.W.3d 303, 305 (Ky.App. 2004),
citing Belcher v. Kentucky Parole Board, 917 S.W.2d 584, 587
(Ky.App. 1996); KRS 439.340(1) (“The board may release on parole
persons confined in any adult state penal or correctional
institution of Kentucky or sentenced felons incarcerated in
county jails eligible for parole.”) (Emphasis added).
Consequently, “‘[t]here is no constitutional or inherent right
of a convicted person to be conditionally released before the
expiration of a valid sentence.... [T]he conviction, with all
its procedural safeguards, has extinguished that liberty
right.’"
Belcher, 917 S.W.2d at 586, quoting Greenholtz v.
Inmates of Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex, 442 U.S. 1,
7, 99 S.Ct. 2100, 2104, 60 L.Ed.2d 668 (1979).
Therefore,
Seymour’s failure to be admitted into the SOTP does not violate
any protected liberty interest as to parole.
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KRS 197.045 generally deals with credits for good
conduct for persons convicted and sentenced to a state penal
institution.
Subsection (4) of this statute specifically
addresses what is required of a person convicted of a crime
under KRS Chapter 510, KRS 530.020, KRS 530.064, KRS 531.310, or
KRS 531.320 before he or she is entitled to any “good time”
credits.
It reads as follows:
(4) Until successful completion of the sex
offender treatment program, a sex offender
may earn good time. However, the good time
shall not be credited to the sex offender's
sentence. Upon the successful completion of
the sex offender treatment program, as
determined by the program director, the
offender shall be eligible for all good time
earned but not otherwise forfeited under
administrative regulations promulgated by
the Department of Corrections. After
successful completion of the sex offender
treatment program, a sex offender may
continue to earn good time in the manner
provided by administrative regulations
promulgated by the Department of
Corrections. Any sex offender, as defined in
KRS 197.410, who has not successfully
completed the sex offender treatment program
as determined by the program director shall
not be entitled to the benefit of any credit
on his sentence. A sex offender who does not
complete the sex offender treatment program
for any reason shall serve his entire
sentence without benefit of good time,
parole, or other form of early release. The
provisions of this section shall not apply
to any sex offender convicted before July
15, 1998, or to any mentally retarded sex
offender.
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The case law is clear that Seymour has no vested right
or reasonable entitlement to good time credit, whether it be the
non-educational good time credit set forth by KRS 197.045(1) or
the meritorious good time credit set forth by KRS 197.045(3).
Rather, it is a privilege that must be earned.
Martin v.
Chandler, 122 S.W.3d 540, 542 (Ky. 2003); see also Fowler v.
Black, 364 S.W.2d 164, 164-65 (Ky. 1963); Anderson v. Parker,
964 S.W.2d 809, 810 (Ky.App. 1997).2
Moreover, our courts have
made clear that the “loss of the mere opportunity to earn goodtime credit does not constitute a cognizable liberty interest.”
Marksberry v. Chandler, 126 S.W.3d 747, 753 (Ky.App. 2003),
citing Luken v. Scott, 71 F.3d 192, 193 (5th Cir. 1995); Abed v.
Armstrong, 209 F.3d 63, 67 (2d Cir. 2000).
Our Supreme Court
has further held that “so long as the conditions or the degree
of confinement to which the prisoner is subjected do not exceed
the sentence which was imposed and are not otherwise in
violation of the Constitution, the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment does not subject an inmate's treatment by
prison authorities to judicial oversight.”
2
Mahoney v. Carter,
The only exception to this rule is the mandatory sixty-day educational good
time credit set forth in KRS 197.045, which the Department of Corrections
“shall provide” when a prisoner successfully receives a GED, high school
diploma, two or four-year college degree, certification in applied sciences,
or a technical education diploma as provided and defined by the Department.
KRS 197.045(1); Martin, 122 S.W.3d at 543 & 543 n.8. However, a denial of
this type of credit has not been put into issue here by Seymour, and there is
nothing within the record to suggest that he is entitled to this sort of
credit. Accordingly, we will not consider the applicability of any “right”
to said credit here.
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938 S.W.2d 575, 576 (Ky. 1997), citing Hewitt v. Helms, 459 U.S.
460, 468, 103 S.Ct. 864, 869-70, 74 L.Ed.2d 675 (1983).
We also
note that a prisoner is not even entitled to a hearing on the
denial or forfeiture of good time credits.
505 S.W.2d 773, 773 (Ky. 1974).
McGuffin v. Cowan,
Accordingly, we fail to see how
due process concerns are implicated here, and we must
consequently reject Seymour’s contention.3
Seymour finally offers a general contention that the
appellees’ refusal to allow him admittance into the SOTP
constitutes cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the 8th
Amendment to the United States Constitution and Section 17 of
the Kentucky Constitution because it has effectively prevented
him from qualifying for parole or for good time credit.
Given
the law and facts previously set forth, however, we cannot
fathom how the DOC’s refusal to accept Seymour into the SOTP
would constitute cruel and unusual punishment, nor has he
directed us to any case law of substance that would support his
position.
The DOC’s refusal to admit Seymour into the SOTP does
not add additional years to the sentence that he is required to
serve pursuant to his conviction.
Moreover, he is allowed to
reapply for admission to the program 180 days after rejection.
3
Seymour adamantly insists that he is not asserting an equal protection claim
even though some of the language in his brief could be construed as relating
to such a claim. Accordingly, we will not consider the merits of an equal
protection argument here.
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Accordingly, we must reject Seymour’s contention as being
utterly without merit.
The judgment of the Oldham Circuit Court is affirmed.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:
BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
Jerry Seymour
LaGrange, Kentucky
Michael D. Triplett
Frankfort, Kentucky
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